Short-term results indicate that laparoscopic incisional hernia repair is associated with a shorter operative time and hospitalization, a faster return to work, and a lower incidence of wound infections and major complications compared to the anterior-open procedure. Further studies and longer follow-up are required to confirm these findings.
The aim of this study is to establish the indications, safety, efficacy, feasibility and reproducibility of the laparoscopic technique in treating defects in the abdominal wall, including those of large dimensions, to standardise the surgical technique and to confirm the performance of the composite prosthesis used (Parietex, Sofradim). The study encompassed the period from January 2001 to December 2004 and included 178 nonselected patients (108 women and 70 men), with an average age of 56 years (range: 26-77 years) and an average body mass index (BMI) of 30 (range: 26-40). These patients were treated for either abdominal hernia (156 patients; 89.7%) or a primary defect (22 patients; 10.3%). The dimensions of the abdominal hernias treated varied from 4 to 26 cm (average: 12.1 cm). All patients were treated using the laparoscopic technique, and all meshes were placed in the intraperitoneal position. Eleven (7%) postoperative complications arose after an average follow-up period of 29 months (range: 1-48 months): seven seromas (4.4%) lasting for 4 weeks, with one becoming infected after being punctured repeatedly; we removed the infected prosthesis by laparoscopy; three (1.9%) patients with persistent neuralgia, which were resolved after 2 months with a prescription for FANS; one patient with a haematoma at the trocar site. There were also four recurrences (2.5%), all of which occurred between 1 and 3 months postsurgery: one in the 'small' group of abdominal hernias (less than 9 cm) and three in the 'large' group of abdominal hernias. With the exclusion of any primary defects, an adhesiolysis was carried out in 99.3% of the patients. In seven cases (4.4%) we carried out a raphe for speritonealisations of loops in the small intestine; in four patients (2.5%), following tenacious adhesion (one patient) and loops fixed to the previous scar by stitches (three patients), we carried out an intestinal perforation (ileus) which was sutured by laparoscopy. The average operating time was 65.6 min (range: 28-130 min), with an average postoperative period in the hospital of 2.1 days (range: 1-5 days). No conversion was observed, and mortality was zero. The results obtained during the clinical trial demonstrate the safety and efficacy of the laparoscopic technique and of the mesh used as well as the reproducibility of the technique in the intraperitoneal treatment of congenital and postincision defects in the abdominal wall, including those of large dimensions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.